Publication | Closed Access
Stress in Teaching: a study of occupational stress and its determinants, job satisfaction and career commitment among primary schoolteachers
324
Citations
32
References
1991
Year
Educational PsychologyTeacher-student RelationEducationTeacher RecruitmentPrimary SchoolteachersElementary EducationTeacher EducationMaltese Primary SchoolteachersStressManagementTeacher DevelopmentCareer CommitmentOccupational StressElementary Education Education Workforce DevelopmentEducational LeadershipEducational StatisticsTeacher Demographic SubgroupsTeachingWork-related StressTeacher EvaluationProfessional DevelopmentCareer EducationGuidance Services
Abstract A questionnaire survey of 710 Maltese primary schoolteachers revealed that the level of teacher stress, job satisfaction and career commitment was constituted differently in some of the teacher demographic subgroups. A principal components analysis of the stress ratings of 20 items covering various aspects of the teacher's work environment yielded four factors described in terms of 'pupil misbehaviour', 'time/ resource difficulties', 'professional recognition needs' and 'poor relationships'. Teacher sex and ability‐group taught interacted significantly with the stress factors. Results also showed that teachers who reported greater stress were less satisfied with their job and less committed to choose a teaching career were they to start life over again. Moreover, the association between the general measure of job stress and the stress due to each of the four stress factors was strongest for 'pupil misbehaviour' and 'time/resource difficulties'. Of the four factors, 'professional recognition needs' had the strongest inverse relationship with job satisfaction and career commitment.
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